There are two problems here:
- How do I change the behaviour of a script when executed as a standalone and when used as a module?
- How do I discover the package name of a piece of code I just compiled?
The general answer to question 2 is: You don't, as any compilation unit may contain an arbitrary number of packages.
Anyway, here are three possible solutions:
- Name your modules so that you already know the name when you load it.
- Have each module register itself at a central rendezvous point.
- Like #1, but adds autodiscovery of your plugins.
The simplest solution is to put all of the API in an ordinary module, and put the standalone logic in a seperate script:
/the/location/
Module/
A.pm
B.pm
a-standalone.pl
b-standalone.pl
Where each standalone basically looks like
use Module::A;
Module::A->run();
If another script wants to reuse that code, it does
use lib "/the/location";
use Module::A;
...
If the loading happens on runtime, then Module::Runtime
helps here:
use Module::Runtime 'use_module';
use lib "/the/location";
my $mod_a = use_module('Module::A');
$mod_a->run();
It isn't strictly necessary to place the contents of a-standalone.pl
and Module/A.pm
into separate files, although that is clearer. If you want to conditionally run code in a module only if it is used as a script, you can utilize the unless(caller)
trick.
Of course all of this is tricksing: Here we determine the file name from the module name, not the other way round – which as I already mentioned we cannot do.
What we can do is have each module register itself at a certain predefined location, e.g. by
Rendezvous::Point->register(__FILE__ => __PACKAGE__);
Of course the standalone version has to shield against the possibility that there is no Rendezvous::Point
, therefore:
if (my $register = Rendezvous::Point->can("register")) {
$register->(__FILE__ => __PACKAGE__);
}
Eh, this is silly and violates DRY. So let's create a Rendezvous::Point
module that takes care of this:
In /the/location/Rendezvous/Point.pm
:
package Rendezvous::Point;
use strict; use warnings;
my %modules_by_filename;
sub get {
my ($class, $name) = @_;
$modules_by_filename{$name};
}
sub register {
my ($file, $package) = @_;
$modules_by_filename{$file} = $package;
}
sub import {
my ($class) = @_;
$class->register(caller());
}
Now, use Rendezvous::Point;
registers the calling package, and the module name can be retrived by the absolute path.
The script that wants to use the various modules now does:
use "/the/location";
use Rendezvous::Point (); # avoid registering ourself
my $prefix = "/the/location";
for my $filename (map "$prefix/$_", qw(Module/A.pm Module/B.pm)) {
require $filename;
my $module = Rendezvous::Point->get($filename)
// die "$filename didn't register itself at the Rendezvous::Point";
$module->run();
}
Then there are fully featured plugin systems like Module::Pluggable
. This system works by looking at all paths were Perl modules may reside, and loads them if they have a certain prefix. A solution with that would look like:
/the/location/
MyClass.pm
MyClass/
Plugin/
A.pm
B.pm
a-standalone.pl
b-standalone.pl
Everything is just like with the first solution: Standalone scripts look like
use lib "/the/location/";
use MyClass::Plugin::A;
MyClass::Plugin::A->run;
But MyClass.pm
looks like:
package MyClass;
use Module::Pluggable require => 1; # we can now query plugins like MyClass->plugins
sub run {
# Woo, magic! Works with inner packages as well!
for my $plugin (MyClass->plugins) {
$plugin->run();
}
}
Of course, this still requires a specific naming scheme, but it auto-discovers possible plugins.
routine()
; instead we only see the 'require' lines. What, really, are you trying to do and what, really, have you tried?&routine
by knowing the path to the.pl
file in which it lives.